i ,Woman’s Realm I - -"Social and Personal -:- Fashions -:- Literature Pearl Necklace I ‘ilfiFashion Hint ' In Spring Vogue \ _ i 4. d’ Pearl necklaces and chokers in fig various lengths are again making an appearance 10f 511mg wear. By some they will be selected as ‘a staple item, others will wear them only with certain types of din-her clothes, while some vromen consider them most appropriate for the afternoon cos- tume. llouevei", pearls are no longer regarded itiercly as a style item, but by many are considered a safe choice when other types of jewelrly are not avuiibalc. The new pearls seem to have just a trillesmgre coloring. and come in a warm flesh wilt and a shade that blends somewhat tolvaijd the new sun and copper tones. The ‘fiery shades use mostly confined to tlielsmaller pearls used in the short strands, while the other two tints are at pres- ent noted in the larger beads which are usetl in shakers. the very long strands that wind about the neck. and in those which come midway be- tween the waistline and throat. An inexpensive jcwery item con- sists of a liat or short chaker made M] m, {Nmonable Junk)" are? of rhinestones, each stone with a ‘ wggflng chegked gingham m“ season) sterling silver mounting and Joined ' [llueereged 15 g pracmal 1mm c105, by silver links. Some of the ‘dainty . 1n; qne-plggg mode; in red and Wynne" necklaces are made in single strands. 5' tones. The rather large bone bilflgng: others in iestoon effects and pendant are red encircled with white. The beltj styles. Sunburst designs are also con- ls shiny rod patent; leather, platted l spicluous in the new collections. With . insets at Oither side of front of skirt , these ciiokers are dainty brawiew below waist line. supply all the full- made with drops or pendants of the ness a little miss needs for freedom rhinestones in graduated sizes. The " 101‘ SP0"!- Slylt? NQ- 535 Call be willed,‘ earrings, which may also be had, are “ac”? “m1 3 Yard-i 0f 40-inch Emil-l either quite long, or short and bushy ham, with ‘A. yard of 32-inch whitei u, use, 05cc; pique for contrast for the girl of 8f The new copper tan and sun um years‘ Pattern comes in Si" 6' m.‘ shades in metal jmvellry are quite 7 s =12 and u years’ The "Hiking is Sm"; becoming and, in fact, very flattering '- p19‘ A “w seam‘ m W“! Primed? when worn with the proper frotfks. pique’ pale blue chambmy’ whim cot-i Mcdernlstic designs, of course, lead ~ ton broadcloth dotted in red French- . . i ' 'in both the ncclaces and bracelet... jblue sbortswelght linen, tan wool jer-i u t ‘nan SM s are sey with brown contrast, and peach but i,‘ Skim“ m. y p t , shantun: are attractive suggestions. expenenmng a bigger Flemand o‘ ~ Price l5 cents in stamps or coin (coin mm pins ma“ {or earrmgs to com‘ t, preferred) wrap com careful“, plete the choker and bracelet sets. ,WB WERE“ "lit When you send 1°,- For those who wear greys and m]; Pena-m you enclose 10 “m; ad. blues a great deal there are some . . Ask 11- .-.u1-;»,._;,y,-_ A CUTE SPORTS DRESS a f". ‘t djflongl go;- g, gqpy o; our spring sets of novelty jewellery made up in M §l Fashion Magazine, n‘; jugt fined both bringht and dull silver baguettes. ‘l t with deliglflul styles, including smart The baguettes are molded togetheruto form various motifs which are de- euumbles and cute designs for the v cidedly modern in appearance. i" kiddies. cheese. Sculd milk. Cook onion (chop- ped) in butter until a golden brown, add flour, blend with scolded milk, and cook slowly l0 minutes. Rub through sirainei- and return to the fire. Add cheese and seasonings. Beat -—%-—- iyolks until light, dilute with one- One quart milk, 1 small onion, 3;‘ half cup of the soup, put in tureen egg yolks, 2 tablespoons butter, 2 and pour hot soup slowly over this, tablespoons flour. 1 teaspoon salt, few: stirring briskly. Serve at once with Iflins pepper. 2 tablespoons gmtedi toast squares. iliForFTYie Geeky DUCHESS SOUP ‘i. Rrotut their flbnder Skins and Silky Hair with Cuticura. ncl you: chlldna the Gideon liable tnlqnnyhav: den akin and lovely Hlflillflh life. The daily use ofCuticuI: animal by Cuficun Oinmicur. keep: Q Ind lmlp dean and healthy. loop I60. Ointment 95o- 50o. Tllcrun Ilk- Scu eon-yahoo. lunch nzh ha. Addnu Canadian Dmu J. T.W:kCnmpca1,UnlnId.lloaue:l. Oullccufalux l: loath; and Cooling - _ you can nowFhavc rugs, ,_m:u and carpets on you: polished fioontbn will not a clip-flu: llé perfectly flat and are always in place. make: every mg irfyaur borne a safety mg.” HOLMA i, Uimottiitown. A___’_ . " “ 1 laughing linu’! gdeqcandblllhthtmiflclooilqll‘ M2144,» Beautiful lylahlnoh BEAUTY QUESTIONS ANSWERED Colffuro for Oval Face Dear Misc Lceda-(l) I h:vo m oval face, a. straight Roman nose. large blue eyes. medium forehead and very thick dark brown hair. I wear my hair marcelled. Would I look better with short hair reaching to the bottom of my ear or with n. long bob, or with my hair done up? (2) Most every time I move the bones in my legs crack. What is the cause and cure of this condition? (3) I am 1'1 years old, 6 feet 4% inches tall and weigh lli pounds. My measure- ments are: Neck, 12%; bust, 82%; waist, 27; hips, 36; thigh, 20%; calf. 13H; ankle, 8%; wrist, 0%; shoe size, file-C. Am I too tall and thin? EILEEN. Answer — (l). Roman noses are hooked. If your nose is a straight and rather large, a long-hair coif- fure would be most becoming. If however, your nose la not larger than the average I would prefer the abort bob for you. 1 really cannot judiZB this point very well without seeing you, of course. Why not let your friends decide which is the most be- coming hairdreaa for you? (2) You should-consult : doctor about your diet. Tell him what you are in the habit o! eating. Your diet is probably not rightly balanced and you are underweight. (3) The aver- a weight for your age and height is b tween 121 and 125 pounds. Your neck and bunt are lmall, but the other measure ‘ are 8005- Y“ are not unusually tail, but you should try to gain about ten pounds. Thln Halt Dear Miss Leeds-O.) My hair i6 very thin. I-low can I make it grow? (2) I am 19 years old. 5 feet 8 inches tall and weigh 132 pounds. Am I overweight? My hips measure 38 inches". how can I reduce them? PEARL 0'D. Answer-O) Scanty hair in a You“! person usually means luck of local care. Be sure to massage your seal? for ten minutes each day. Brush the hair fifty times on each :idc with I- clean brush every day. ind wash it it least twice a month; i1 it i: oily, wash it oftener. Keep the lcalP @1915 5M free from dandruff. (2) You are n. few pound: below the average weight for your age. Ind height. Your hips are not too large for your height. I do not think you can reduce them. since their width is probably due to their bonY structure and not to excess fat. To keep them from becoming really fat you must take regular exercise. Walk several miles a day and coal-SO i" some sort of outdoor sport. IBIS LEEDS. m. magic in Hunt! 6mm Dear Miss Leeds-I am in m)’ 3°5- but my skin u settinz leather» with enlarged pom and some black- heads around the non. The P0"! refuse to reduce mindless of hOW well the particular akin food 0i‘ astringeiit fa advertised to work. Th! result is never that. pictured by the manufacturers. D0 you think thI-t facial agneaiu or witch-haul would help? I: there any way in iron Oil! M. I‘. R. Anlwor-‘lbero l: no mlllii in beauty cream: that can couninmt the ill effects of wrong uu of make- up, incorrect dict and constipation. Try thi: limlilo homo ttoatmant. At bedtime eimue your 1m With ¢°1¢ cream, wipe it of! and wflh With plenty of warm wafer and pure 0a:- tllo mp. Rinse and lather uglin- Glva a final rinn in cold wow Ind rub your face with I M". M M wrapped in a handkerchief. DI’! carefully. If the akin fouls unsitlvi. put in : little uirinunt M! "W"- um mornflil bathe your fm 1m bid water m- uvmi minim! W‘ dry carefully. AIM! 9°"? W74" hm and powder, l! W“ "l. "Y- lumomber that local UIIWWI" :1ono cannot cure tho condition. In named you nut watch your 6M- avold connipatlon and lxmill: ovifl “y, gee that your weight. It comet bedtime. ' fi then-lama» T u Dorothy Dix Letter Box . 'Are Children Worth While?-How to Make a Husband Provide a Real Home for His Wife. Do Men or Women Take Love More Seriously ‘I Dear Miss Dix-My husband is very anxious for children, but I don't want any. Bringing them into the world involves a lot of luflering and danger on the woman's part and after that she has practicauy to devote he!‘ life to them for the next ten or twelve years. They i duct a lot of money to roar and then like as not they turn out badly and are a disgrace to you instead of :. comfort. I can't see where children pay. ' M. B. P. Answer: That is because you have never had any children, Mn. M. B. P. By the same token a. blind man does not know how beautiful a sunset may be nor does a deal man realize how ravishing the music of a sym- phony orcheati-a is. Once you held your own baby in the crook of your arm and felt the thrill of its little hand clinging to yours you would know how children pay. Of course, they coat c. lot. Bo does everything else that is worth having. There is nothing for nothing in this hard-boiled old world of ours. We have always got to settle with the fiddler. We have to pay for even living, and if we sat down and figured out everything to the last detail perhaps we would not find it worth while to live at all. You have to pay for the food you eat by your labor in buying :nd cooking it. You have to pay for your home by rower-ending labor in keeping it clean and sweet. You have to pay for your husband by making many sac- rifices of your own taste and comfort. ‘Jeu have to pay for your friends by courtesy and consideration. For everything youget you have to pay. Children woift cost you more than any other luxury, except for the great initial price of child birth. That is a great price, but it is one that a brave woman faces wtth a high heart for the reward it brings her, wiuie as for the danger, it is uarcely to be regarded in these days when we think nothing o! risking our necks in automobiles and crossing the streets and going up in airplanes. As to why children are worth while, consider these points: first, they are the greatest pleasure in life. You may see nothing particularly fascin- ating and alluring in a little, red-faced, squirming infant that belongs to some one else, but when it is your own baby you will see ineflable beauty in a countenance that looks like a cross between a cream cheese and a. lobster and you will spend hours in which you are thrilled at watching it breathe. Every whimper that it makes will be the music of the spheres in your ears. and when To say! "Ma-ma" for the first time you will be 50 excited you will want to have it broadcast over the radio to a waiting world. Seeing a little child's mind develop is the most fascinating sport that you will ever engage in, and if you miss that you will have cut yourself out of one of the greatest pleasures in life. Next, children pay because they give us an interest in life. when you get :lon| toward midi-ll: age and, after you will have sci-i; of lest interest, m yourself. You won't be as keen about having things or doing things as you used in be. Your story is told and you know that you will never do any oi the wonderful things that you used to dream of doing when yu were youngg Bill- 11 W" hi" children you can live your life over again in them. You will find it is a lot more fun to buy frilly clothes for a pretty young daughter than to spend your money on finery for afat, middle-aged old woman who: looks about the same in everything. You will get lots more kick out of buy- ,- irig a- sport car for a young son who will be simply wild over it than you will l out of getting this year's model for yourself. And you will believe that John i and Mary are geniuses who are going to make the grade that you never could ‘ quite negotiate. l Listen to mother brag about Mary's beaux. Listen to father boast of; the success that John i: making. They 8.11 have m’ fmcrest in life, aorne- ; thing vital that the childless people haven't got. § . Children pay because they are the real tie that binds a husband and} wife together. Many a. woman's hold on her husband is through hai- child- i ren. Hut for them he would leave her and go to some woman who fa more i truly his mate than she it. And if a husband and wife really love each! other, than the children make them truly one, because they are bound to-l gather by : vital interest and they have in common and by the memories of, cradles they have bent over, of sick bets they have watched beside, of al million hopes and fears and ambitions they have shared together. Oh. yes, children pay, Mrs. M. B. P., even in a financial sense. Look about you and see the old parent: who but for their children would be lni almahousea. Look about you and see the old parents WhOBe children are making their last days sweet and beautiful with love and devotion and who but for them would be lonely old men and women at the mercy of hlrelinga. Tho woman who refuses to bear children robs herself. She robs her country and she robs he: husband. She cheats on ifatirre. Ifshi did not mean to give her husband children she had no right to marry. DOROTHY DIX. Dear Dorothy Dlx—1 have been married eight years to a mln who is very kind and devoted to me and whom I love very much, but during all of this time we have lived in one housekeeping room. It isn't because we can- not afford something better, as my husband makes a. good nlasy and we have no children, but he has found that I am tidy and can getllong this way and although he is always promising to give me a home. he never doesf it. Now living in this way has got on my nerves and I feel that I can't stand it any longer. Bo what would you advise? RODAI-I. Abner: That is easy, Rodah. You have the remedy your own hands. Quit’ being neat and orderly and keeping Werything cked away. 14st your one; room get so cluttered up with the cooking utensil: and the dishes and the food‘ and the clothe: that your husband will have to have n search warrant to find :' club lhirt, and it will get on hi: nerve: and he will lot you n. better place to live. I attribute‘ much of ‘tho divorce Ind domestic infeliclty of the day to, tho little two-by-four flats and housekeeping rooms in which so manyi poopldl-ra forced to live; Also, it i: responsible for the hoqdiumism of the! modern children. ‘ People who have to live crowded uptogethcr with no privacy, m; Iplcg for their poi-mill belongings, no room of flholr a!!! to which ‘may can go and b0 quiet and nt, themselves together are bound m irritate mil other and rub loch other the wrong way. . We need elbow room apirituauy Just as muchuwodcphylloallmandtbareuoifthmuud tobcmmhappy homes mhuimmmwwubocauotuoywarebfncrmmu. . l ‘ _-_q--1- . _ Tum ub tlmol, notion, when acumen cane: to be : virtue. That Aafilf hour bu: muck for m- ‘rail your bulimia that if he not: :u amiable. Household Hints pylobalblm aggpr s Bill Rugs will not curl-at the corners if a piece of. haircloth about eight. inches square la sewed to the under- side of each corner. SEEKS SNAKE. FIRES VILLAGE In an effort to capture for his din- ner a snake he had spied in a bam- ‘ boo tree, a Burmese villlager of Kyai- l sanlkon, near Yamethln, India, rec- ently set fire to the tree. As a result Wpahing Oiled and varnished Wood: Oftentlme: if oiled and varnished woods are simply wiped with a flan- nel cloth wrung out of warm. soft 50 of the 76 houses in the bamboo mm,‘ it u ‘u the menu“: may "_ village were desiroyed by the flames. “km l, ‘_ ' Bhculi. Dough Fm!” ‘rryrolling the dough thinner than usual when “ _, biscuits. Make F" flitting ‘he ha“ °f " cmmm" two cuts. placing one on top o! the e1‘ “m” a P~ m" Jam” Rlmme" w“ f other, and the biscuits will open recently fined in a Southport, EHS- I “my land, court. Rimmers‘ plea. that his,‘ - was a one-man business and because . of war injuries he could work only I iew days a week did not avail. CUTS HAIIV TOO LATE. A MomingSmile ‘auiawaxauiuo or CONSCIENCE naasmzu LIKES m; oraaa - Declared to be the’ moat cbanninz musical comedy of the nineteenth century. "The Barber of Bagdad," by Peter Cornelius. was recently produc- ed in the State Opera at Dresden. Germany. The work is said to be full _ of genuine poetry and pure humor. First Tramp-Look, Tom, there is the minister's house; the window's open and all the folks are at church, an‘ they don't keep no dorg, so that we couldn't have a softer anapl Second Tramp (with suppressed emotion) -- Tho minister's house do ‘you say? Ah, Bill, I have been a bold. bad man, but I have never yet rob- bed the clergy. They are a hard- ‘workin’ lot an’ their pay is small; be- sides, some of the tcndereat recollec- tions of an innercent boyhood is coup- led with my Sunday school days ’ (wipes away ‘a tear). But, Bill, you haven't got the same feelin‘ in the matter I has; and lf yer've made up yer mind to enter the place, why I'll stay outside and keep watch, and I'll give n. whistle if I sec any one cumii-rl SAHARA RACE BIEET HELD while America and Europe shiver-t ed, Biskra, the Ascot of the Sahara. recently held its annual race meet- ing. The Arab chiefs drove ln slate to the event, and -after a. full racing programwaa carried out a bpBOél-CU- lar display was given by Arab horse- H1611. WAR HERO DECORATES NURSE At a military lnvestiture held rec- ently at the Invalides, Paris, Nurse Lenhardt received the cross of they Legion of Honor from Lieutenant‘ Regnier. a war-wounded hero whom she had nursed. The lieutenant was wheeled in his invalid chair to the ceremony. Etiquette Iylobu-hln: Q. Should fish be cut with a knife? A. No; the cuttlngcf some sea- food with a steel knife affects the flavor of it and renders it less deli- cute. The iiesa u so tender um it GLIMPSES 0F THE GLOBE i 4 i Wot L Ifialy has a cyclingenee, Wooden shoes are W811i: in Paris‘ Motor bandits are busy iu Ireland Stilpakating is popular in mo“ Chile now has 2,000,000 head 9g c:tt.lc. Portsmouth, England, has bani-leg Sunday golf on its municipal links, The tax-reduction France Ls growing. movement i; Talking pictures have just been in- troduced into New Zcaland. The cost of living in Germany l, flow the highest since stabilization, Miniature make-up boxes are be. in: carried by “smnrw dressers o; Paris. Both Association and Rugby idol. ball are being played in Italy m; year. Magna Charts. Inn, Wilford, Eng. land. has been converted into | church. Germany produced 105,750,000 to,“ of coal last year. Daily A rguments AUNT HET BY CLAUDE CAILLAN Laughter Now MBMIIYM may be cut witha. silver fork. Q. What seats should be reserved for relatives and intimate friends at n. church wedding? Possibility oi‘ the success of comed- ians on the stage being mgagupgd ma“ chemically is predicted with the recent A The 3mm "its “my! invention of a new apparatus that is‘ Q’ what woman’ should‘ “W,” said to rcglsicr the exntwt "strength"‘ wearing bu," l iii “ ill ’ ° e mumkr m‘ d by 3 “m”: A. Some authorities say that blue S3 i "I'm tired out. but after readln’ piece in a theatre or nuislc hall. Dru-l i itmtic critics o! Europe are taking‘ Q,::t,,::°mm to the woman with. more than passing inwrest in the _____,,,________ ditty blew“? "my “m” the"; aented the petition. The remaining: .- . w N“ Pr‘ “""m'1 “f pmlsmg m‘, graves will be opened, and the bodical author's “it. 0r discussing ll. comed-- mo. d, rd m“ qualifies, It M“ be ngcessary er 015m n o er to save them from the. ' | t only to say: Lafogrsph 100, or 50, or 0, as the case may be. First night audiences will be able to watch the indicator of the machine. Germany To Una New Device , Difficulty in obtaining suitable, laborers and in meeting the contin-i H1111? riiinil scale of wages on North German farms. ia believed to be r neatly overcome by a novel machine. 1 "Willi-ml bl’ i German engineer. The! i devise has the appearance of a trac- I tor. and will drill through the topi il t ti b of the cenietery. which dates back :11 $170153‘; fifltlfeaiziirflolze “not; ::".::'.“".:‘:;':‘.:"i“~ "r ‘*‘":r"-t m ~ Mu mil‘ Amidst: the sgéigmfiddggrfllxt: 13y its use many unprofitable marsh-l ° illndl My be farmed wcceasfully. w be 5"“ m‘ °nly human YT“? = The German Government ill but parts of coffins, and in i'~-~ , _ I Etta... M n h km ‘ Wu use-me bed itself headstones arc visibl iJzs-i m1 it large scale d vim nh emmy’ cendants of those buried this. ilfC-t mum ur n3 t e comm‘ space that is big enough t Graveyard Disappearing Because the graveyard at Buriloy. Scotland, ls being washed away by the River Lochy, afliclals recently grant- ed a. petition to have it closed. Peti- tioners showed that at least one-third appy in. DOROTHY DIX. B"! Miss DiXTWho takes love more acrioualy, men q- new" K. T. AIl-BWCTJ According to the poet. “man's love la of min‘: life : thing '[p.n m, woman's whole existence." \ ' But you can't answer that question definitely. It all depend; eh the individual man and woman. but as a gcncral thing I thing "m," 10v, mo" than men do. T a. book like that I've got to go to f Pflylr meal-in‘ or take a built." ‘ POOR PA i BY ROBERT QUILLEN "I think M: hurried me away from our llltor-ln-law’: been“ aha was impatient l0 tell me that Emm: didn't cook that rake I bragged on." ChildliéenCi-y I I (ASTORIA A IAIY RBHIUY \ APPIIIVIDIYDOCMIC Ion wtkfitlfirafimlmiaaaiiu I